Review
"This eye-opening book…puts specific problems, and often single case-histories, under the microscope." --Bradley Winterton, Taipei Times.
(Bradley Winterton
Taipei Times )
From the Inside Flap
Asian American Women brings together landmark scholarship about Asian American women that has appeared in Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies over the last twenty-five years. The essays, written by established and emerging scholars, made a significant impact in the fields of Asian American studies, ethnic studies, womens studies, American studies, history, and pedagogy. The scholarship is still relevant todaybroadening our critical understanding of Asian American womens resistance to the forces of racism, patriarchy, militarism, cultural imperialism, neocolonialism, and narrow forms of nationalism.
The essays in this collection reveal the experiences and struggles of Asian American women within a global political, economic, cultural, and historical context. The essays focus on diverse issues, including unconventional Asian American women of the early 1900s; the life of a Japanese war bride; possibilities for transnational Asian American feminism; the politics of Vietnamese American beauty pageants; mixed race identities and bisexual identities; Filipina healthcare providers; South Asian American representations; and a multiracial exchange on pedagogical interventions. The collection represents the rich diversity of Asian American womens lives in hope of creating a new transnational space of critical dialogue, strategic resistance, and alliance building.